At least 30,000 New South Wales public sector workers, including prison officers, park rangers, school support staff, ServiceNSW workers and civilian police employees, took 24-hour strike action and rallied in Bathurst, Grafton, Wagga Wagga, Newcastle, Broken Hill, Tamworth and other towns across the state on June 8.
In Sydney, workers met in Hyde Park and marched to parliament, chanting 鈥淪crap the cap!鈥, 鈥淲hat do we want? A pay rise! When do we want it? Now!鈥 and 鈥淯nion! Power!鈥 They carried placards including 鈥淏ushfires, floods, pandemic. Pay cut!鈥 and 鈥淐rime doesn't pay. Neither does this government!鈥
The Public Service Association (PSA) is pushing for fair pay rises and the permanent abolition of the 2.5% wage cap, legislated in 2011 by the NSW government on public employees.
Unions NSW secretary Mark Morey called on the government to end its pay cap on public servants, which is due to rise to 3% next financial year, and 3.5% the following. PSA Senior Vice-President Juliette Sizer told the rally that the pay cap is 鈥渄isgraceful and unjust鈥.
鈥淣ow is the time for the government to support us. We need a pay rise to start at 5.2%,鈥 which is just above the current inflation rate of 5.1%.
PSA General Secretary Stewart Little said: 鈥淭his offer is pure politics 鈥 moving half a per cent and playing silly games with one-off bonuses for certain workers.鈥
鈥淓nough is enough! Our time is now 鈥 Whatever the crisis, the public sector is there. Flood, fire, pandemic, the frontline workers hold the line.
鈥淚f the premier is going to insist that workers deserve a pay cut he鈥檚 going to meet fierce resistance.鈥
The government decided to give frontline health staff a $3000 bonus for their work during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Little said noone is more deserving of a bonus than health care workers, but that more public servants should be getting it, including PSA聽members in the Ministry of Health, epidemiologists, contact tracers, teachers and other emergency service workers.
Labor opposition spokesperson on industrial relations Sophie Cotsis said the government is pitting workers against each other.
the government must invest in public services by hiring more workers and ending the overwork and understaffing. It is calling for wages to keep up with the cost of living, arguing that this would attract more workers to the essential work sector and lift the quality of public services.
鈥淚t is illogical that all workers in essential services are not offered full-time permanent roles,鈥 the union confederation said. It also wants an end to privatisation and to ensure all government contracts pay the same wages for the same work to stop 鈥渢he race to the bottom鈥 where businesses compete on lower wages with insecure work.
One PSA member who works for the workers鈥 insurance agency iCare told 麻豆传媒 that pay rises should at least keep up with inflation and frontline workers deserve extra for their work during the recent crises.
鈥淭he next step [to pressure the government] would be to have a combined strike and rally by all unions and staff of the whole public sector,鈥 they said. 鈥淚t would send a louder message of our determination and help build solidarity among all public sector workers.鈥
If the government does not come to the table 鈥渨e鈥檒l be back for sure鈥, they said. 鈥淲e need a sustained campaign, not just a one-day strike, to show them that we鈥檙e serious.鈥
The strike by public servants follows strikes over the past six months by teachers, nurses, ambulance drivers and public transport workers all calling for real pay rises and improved conditions.
[Jim McIlroy is a retired public servant and life-long unionist.]